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Wednesday, June 10, 2026

White Bird of Paradise Plants for $49.99 for Costco Members by Ruth Paget

White Bird of Paradise Plants for $49.99 for Costco Members by Ruth Paget 

While out for a weekly marketing trip to Costco with my husband Laurent and daughter Florence Paget, I saw that Costco was selling White Bird of Paradise plants by the entrance for $49.99. 

These plants are native to South Africa and add tropical flair and elegance to indoor décor. The plants come in white container pots that blend in easily with contemporary furnishings. 

White bird of paradise plants have large, glossy, oval leaves that look like canoe paddles. They can grown quite tall around 5 to 6 feet indoors.  White flowers typically bloom between spring and fall.

The white bird of paradise plants are currently selling for $49.99 on the Costco website and app to store members. The Costco website and app have current pricing and availability. 

Having a white bird of paradise plant invites sipping a cup of herbal Rooibos tea from South Africa as part of an African tea party. 

White bird of paradise image below:

https://gardengoodsdirect.com/products/white-bird-of-paradise?srsltid=AfmBOoq9nzPd9cFU0HI3tO74gupI3xZUEUGUn226K40M5GPGxzsT2ZoL

By Ruth Paget, author Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France and developer of the Novgorod and Bento War Games

Running a Neapolitan Pizzeria Basics Review by Ruth Paget

Running a Pizzeria Basics Review by Ruth Paget 

Before he was a Food Network personality and owner of a Micheli-starred restaurant, Mario Batali owned a pizzeria in Greenwich Village in New York City. 

His book Molto Gusto shares his experience gained in organizing the food offerings that go beyond Neapolitan pizza at this pizzeria and offer some insight into what to offer on a pizzeria menu. 

Batali organizes his book into the following chapters: 

-vegetable antipasti 

-seafood and meat antipasti 

-cheese -insalata 

-pasta, 

-pizza 

-gelato and sorbetto 

As I read through these chapters, I thought that if you could master making these items, sourcing ingredients, and keeping a steady inventory, you could run a successful pizzeria like Batali did and give yourself the cash necessary to finance a more formal restaurant. 

Batali like most Italians stresses the importance of buying local, organic produce at farmers’ markets for the best results. Batali suggests vegetable antipasti like the following to take advantage of spring and summer bounty:

-spring peas with mint, red onion, red wine vinaigrette, and sea salt 

-shaved fresh asparagus with Parmesan cheese, lemon juice, olive oil, and sea salt 

-green beans with charred onions, balsamic vinegar, orange juice, olive oil, and sea salt 

-cherry tomatoes with crème fraîche and chives 

-radishes with butter and salt 

Batali lists 11 kinds of meat antipasti. Charcuterie is often eaten by Italians so they do not have to heat up the home to make meals. (The Columbus brand at Costco and Nob Hill makes it easy to sample Italian charcuterie in Salinas, California.) 

In the cheese chapter, Batali lists many kinds of cheese that can be eaten alone, shaved on salads, or grated on dishes to be baked. The cheese in the book is photographed, identified, and described for the following varieties:  

-Parmigiano-Reggiano 

-Pecorino Romano

-Tuada 

-Vento d’Estate

-Caciotta 

-Baia Friuli 

-Bra 

-Ubriaco 

-Castel Rosso 

-Brunet 

-Mozzarella di Bufala

 -Burrata 

-Stracchino 

-Fresh Ricotta 

-Smoked Ricotta 

-Marzolino 

-Cacio di Roma 

-Bel Paese 

-Taleggio 

-Blu di Langa 

-Gorgonzola 

-Sampietrino 

Batali provides his pizza dough making recipe which uses high protein 00 flour. He provides recipes for the classic pizza recipes of Naples including: 

-Marinara made with stewed tomatoes, olive oil, garlic, chile pepper, and oregano 

-Margherita made with tomatoes, olive oil, mozzarella, and basil leaves 

-Romana made with tomatoes, olive oil, anchovy fillets, capers, chile pepper, and mozzarella  -Napoletana made with tomatoes, olive oil, anchovy fillets, capers, and Gaeta olive 

-Quatro Formaggi made with tomatoes, mozzarella, Taleggio, cacao di Roma, and Parmigiano-Reggiano 

-Quattro Staggioni made with tomatoes, fresh mozzarella, Taleggio, cacao di Roma, and Parmigiano-Reggiano 

You can eat very well as a family using recipes in Molto Gusto by Mario Batali and learn the skills needed to work in a pizzeria or maybe one day run or own a pizzeria. 

Molto Gusto by Mario Batali provides much insightful information into the food of Italy, especially Naples, making it a good reference for lovers of Italy as well as cooks. 

By Ruth Paget, author Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France and developer of the Novgorod and Bento War Games

Tuesday, June 9, 2026

UChicago Quantrell Teaching Award Winners 2026 reposted by Ruth Paget

Quantell Teaching Award Winners at the University of Chicago foster questioning texts, media, research, and people in an environment of intellectual freedom that inspires not pacifies in the words of one of the Quanterell recipients.

A list of Quantrell award recipients for 2026 and a description of their teaching processes follow:

https://news.uchicago.edu/story/uchicago-announces-2026-winners-quantrell-and-phd-teaching-awards

Reposted by Ruth Paget, author Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France and developer of the Novgorod and Bento War Games

Majesty Palms for $40 for Costco Members by Ruth Paget

Majesty Palms for $49.99 for Costco Members in Sand City, California by Ruth Paget 

While doing weekly marketing with my husband Laurent and daughter Florence Paget, I saw that Costco is selling Majesty Palms for $49.99 outside the entrance. 

The plants stand about 7 feet tall at the store, but can grow to 10 to 15 feet high according to the Costco website. The Majesty Palm has feathery leaves that move easily in the direction of wind. 

The Costco Majesty Palms come in white container pots and are meant for indoors. The Costco Majesty Palms take in the carbon dioxide that humans breathe out and “exhale” oxygen to a room, making their presence more than decorative. 

More information about Majesty Palms at Costco and current purchase and availability information follow: 

https://www.yahoo.com/lifestyle/costco-40-palm-trees-steal-151500816.html?guccounter=1&guce_referrer=aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZ29vZ2xlLmNvbS8&guce_referrer_sig=AQAAAD_imJxpL7n038Bez751bZX393H_3macZaDKRh8SUMQeM1RXPvDJfZumcnuG5cDW5zxMG5yXivB6kGRfIYvq00klS0hVJUPQ-iN-JMOtP1P9oSowbfGNVEihDCGBCqBZuFprcisOR-bY1furDk8DBvjqlzY-phBAn6wZmBIb3PMj

Majesty Palms are originally from the island of Madagascar off the southeastern Coast of Africa. 

By Ruth Paget, author Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France and developer of the Novgorod and Bento War Games

UChicago Booth Podcast on Informal Markets in India reposted by Ruth Paget

University of Chicago Booth Podcast on Informal Markets in Northeastern India Provides Interesting Insight into Extending Credit in Ethnic Communities and Responsibilities for Family Debt reposted by Ruth Paget

This University of Chicago Booth Podcast podcast discusses the work of Rimmy E. Tony on the millenias’ old bazaar market in Shillong in Northeastern India.

Tomy reports that informal markets contribute 30% of GDP and 70% of national employment in India.

The Shillong City bazaar serves various ethnic communities due to immigration with “trust” operating to extend credit within these communities.

One form of trust is established by having children, who can assume parents’ when they die.

To listen to this podcast or read the audio transcript about the role of informal markets in India, click on the link below:

https://www.chicagobooth.edu/review/podcast/how-do-informal-markets-work?source=ic-em-20260609&mkt_tok=MjUwLUNRSC05MzYAAAGiS980JqcAmzKvj7dzguUs6nnIxQzm3AB8xkBzwlB-EkN7336R6wImwnOYSdF_HX4KbTXXJzMT1LIbcSkNMTpLJrSlQmFp0jAOlRhiYbFzfQXK6vg

Reposted by Ruth Paget, author Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France and developer of the Novgorod and Bento War Games

A Glimpse into Imperial Austria by Ruth Paget

A Glimpse into Imperial Austria by Ruth Paget 

To Set Before the King: Katharina Schratt’s Festive Recipes is an annotated original source material of loosely written recipes prepared for Emperor Franz Joseph 1 of Austria and King of Hungary by Katharina Schratt, the lead actress of the Court Theatre Company in Vienna. 

Katharina prepared the 146 appetizers and main dishes and 158 dessert dishes for not only the Emperor, but also crowned heads of state, leading industrialists, and diplomats. Schratt reported the details of her luncheons with these notables of the world to the Emperor during weekly lunches and kaffee klatsches with him. 

The recipes themselves are notes written with no measures and vague directions. The recipes do provide a privileged glimpse into an elite larder which has the ingredients for sophisticated dishes as well as comfort foods of the Habsburg Empire. 

The recipes are not in alphabetical order, but the book has an index and numbers the recipes for quick reference. In the 21st century, it is easy to look up precise recipes for these dishes online. 

I am familiar with three of the recipes from Schratt’s recipe list thanks to living in Stuttgart (Germany), Madison (Wisconsin), and Detroit (Michigan): 

Recipe #83 – Swabian Spätzle Noodles 

These noodles are made with flour, eggs, salt, and water that is formed into an elastic dough. The dough is rolled out into long, narrow strips that are shaved into boiling water. When cooked, they are served with butter and parsley. 

I first ate spätzle at a restaurant in Madison (Wisconsin) that was located in a converted train station. (I think the restaurant was called The Depot.) 

I liked eating a plate of spätzle followed by vegetable soup in winter and salad in summer. The restaurant also served charcuterie boards and cheese boards.  Dessert may have been seasonal fruit salad. (American has many train depots in little country towns that could easily offer this type of menu.  In California, Grange Halls might be interested in this kind of restaurant as well.)

Spätzle are originally from Swabia, the region around Stuttgart, Germany. I did make some when I lived in Germany, but called them maltagliatelle (badly made tagliatelle in Italian). The ingredients are the same as Italian tagliatelle and flour gnocchi and English Yorkshire pudding.

Recipe #32 Fritto Misto 

You know these recipes are meant for the king when you consider that Austria is landlocked and far from the sea. This dish calls for an abundance of lightly floured seafood deep-fried in new oil no doubt. 

Recipe #138 Hungarian Cabbage Rolls  

These are different from Polish cabbage rolls, but equally good. 

For this recipe, you make a roux and add it to sauerkraut, which is placed in the bottom of a baking dish. Then, you blanch cabbage leaves and pull them apart. 

The cabbage leaves are stuffed with chopped port, onions, parsley, salt, and eggs. The rolls are placed on top of the sauerkraut. Cream mixed with paprika is poured over the rolls with a few strips of bacon placed on top of the cream. The rolls are baked and served piping hot. 

Finally, rice sausages seem to be the potato chips of the Habsburg Empire and are a new recipe for me that works well in California, which grows rice.  

Recipe #27 Rice Sausages 

Cook rice in milk, salt it, and allow it to cool. Form sausages out of the rice and fry them. 

Readers who might enjoy To Set Before the King: Katharina Schratt’s Festive Recipes includes cooks and diners with Austrian and Hungarian ancestry and students of history. 

Happy Cooking! 

By Ruth Paget, author Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France and developer of the Novgorod and Bento War Games

Great Courses Sale -$30 off per course sale ends soon reposted by Ruth Paget

Great Courses has a sale on for $30 off per course with 300 courses to choose from till Thursday, June 11, 2026.

I have used their courses to learn photography, nutrition, macroeconomics, and tai chi and qigong.

Information about the sale follows:

https://mail.google.com/mail/mu/mp/465/#cv/priority/%5Esmartlabel_promo/19eac108919338e4

Reposted by Ruth Paget, author Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France and developer of the Novgorod and Bento War Games